Weekly interview: "Safe Passage" (Printed June 8, 2007)
By Amanda Estes
Staff Writer
As part of a team of 14 Cape Elizabeth High School students traveling to Guatemala later this month, soon to be freshmen Jack Queeney and Ben Berman said they were looking forward to teaching the local children some skills outside of the classroom.
“Jack and I decided we were going to play ultimate Frisbee with the kids,” said Queeney.
He and Berman offered their perspectives during a recent interview with Susan Dana at Cape Elizabeth Middle School.
Dana, a seventh and eighth grade Spanish teacher, will lead the group of students on a service trip for Safe Passage, an organization that provides a variety of support services for the children of families working in Guatemala City’s garbage dump.
Last year, students collected school supplies for Safe Passage and they could have done that again this year, but instead the students will have the opportunity to assist teachers in the local schools.
“It seemed like a great opportunity to not only go down and help people, but also improve our Spanish,” said Berman.
Dana has been at work organizing the trip since January and the students have held several fundraisers including a bottle drive, raffle, a Yankee Candle sale and a Spanishathon, in which students pledged to speak only Spanish for four hours. The Cape Elizabeth Lions Club also provided some funds based on an agreement that the group would do a presentation on their trip when they return and help out with a pancake breakfast or two.
Half of the funds will be used to purchase supplies to leave with the local schools and half will be used to pay trip costs, which include a mandatory $100 donation from each participant.
In order to go on the trip, students have to have two years of Spanish under their belt.
Both Queeney and Berman have had five years of Spanish so they feel confident they will be able to get their points across.
Dana said Guatemala has a free, public education system, but children are responsible for their own uniforms and books. The $150 a year for school supplies is “completely unreachable” for a poor family, she said.
Part of Safe Passage’s mission is to support public schools by offering tutoring, medical support and emotional support, Dana said. The organization also provides a stipend to parents if their children attend school because when their children are at school, the parents are losing a source of income.
Dana said one of the unique things about the Safe Passage program and a result of founder and Maine native Hanley Denning’s vision, is that volunteers go into the schools with an attitude of “what do you need?” and “what’s going to help you?” rather than a predetermined curriculum.
One of the projects that Cape Elizabeth students will be involved with is helping the children create “Soy yo” books or “This is me” books. With digital cameras and a printer that the group will leave for the school, Cape students will take pictures of the children and then they will work together to fill the book with words. At the end of the week, the children will have their very own books about themselves.
On Jan. 18, 2007, Denning died in an automobile accident in Guatemala City. It was during a tribute event in March at the Merrill Auditorium, that Dana and Berman said they were really inspired by Denning and her organization.
After seeing a screening of the Recycled Life, a documentary about the dump, Dana said she was struck by the dignity of the Guatemalan people and the dignity that Denning showed to them.
The students will be staying at a hotel owned by Safe Passage in Antigua, which is 45 minutes outside of the capital city. According to the Safe Passage Web site, the Lazos Fuertes hotel not only houses volunteers, but it also serves as a training ground for local youth between the ages of 13 and 15. The participants learn all about running a hotel and restaurant, skills that will hopefully prevent them from having to make a living in the dump.
When asked how families make a living in the dump, Berman said the people sort through the trash looking for things they can sell, such as plastic bottles.
Dana said she heard from a student who had made the trip that the smell was indescribable. She said the people are working and living among hypodermic needles and medical waste in this dump that spans acres and acres of land.
Within the last several years, she said, the Guatemalan government has taken action to prevent children under the age of 16 from entering the dump. Due to methane gas buildups, fires are a frequent occurrence.
“It’s still not safe, but it’s safer,” she said. The students will not visit the dump, but they will not be able to miss it as they travel through the city.
Dana said the students would spend one day with a social worker, visiting some local homes. She said the presence of a social worker is a good idea as there will be “poverty these students have never seen.”
On the other hand, Dana said there is a “richness to family values that we forget (and) a real richness to their lives there (in terms of) a sense of community that is being lost in our culture.”
The trip is certainly providing a method of bringing people together in Cape Elizabeth as Dana said she knows of a number of adults who would like to make the trip.
“We want to plant the seed for Cape Elizabeth,” she said.
Staff Writer
As part of a team of 14 Cape Elizabeth High School students traveling to Guatemala later this month, soon to be freshmen Jack Queeney and Ben Berman said they were looking forward to teaching the local children some skills outside of the classroom.
“Jack and I decided we were going to play ultimate Frisbee with the kids,” said Queeney.
He and Berman offered their perspectives during a recent interview with Susan Dana at Cape Elizabeth Middle School.
Dana, a seventh and eighth grade Spanish teacher, will lead the group of students on a service trip for Safe Passage, an organization that provides a variety of support services for the children of families working in Guatemala City’s garbage dump.
Last year, students collected school supplies for Safe Passage and they could have done that again this year, but instead the students will have the opportunity to assist teachers in the local schools.
“It seemed like a great opportunity to not only go down and help people, but also improve our Spanish,” said Berman.
Dana has been at work organizing the trip since January and the students have held several fundraisers including a bottle drive, raffle, a Yankee Candle sale and a Spanishathon, in which students pledged to speak only Spanish for four hours. The Cape Elizabeth Lions Club also provided some funds based on an agreement that the group would do a presentation on their trip when they return and help out with a pancake breakfast or two.
Half of the funds will be used to purchase supplies to leave with the local schools and half will be used to pay trip costs, which include a mandatory $100 donation from each participant.
In order to go on the trip, students have to have two years of Spanish under their belt.
Both Queeney and Berman have had five years of Spanish so they feel confident they will be able to get their points across.
Dana said Guatemala has a free, public education system, but children are responsible for their own uniforms and books. The $150 a year for school supplies is “completely unreachable” for a poor family, she said.
Part of Safe Passage’s mission is to support public schools by offering tutoring, medical support and emotional support, Dana said. The organization also provides a stipend to parents if their children attend school because when their children are at school, the parents are losing a source of income.
Dana said one of the unique things about the Safe Passage program and a result of founder and Maine native Hanley Denning’s vision, is that volunteers go into the schools with an attitude of “what do you need?” and “what’s going to help you?” rather than a predetermined curriculum.
One of the projects that Cape Elizabeth students will be involved with is helping the children create “Soy yo” books or “This is me” books. With digital cameras and a printer that the group will leave for the school, Cape students will take pictures of the children and then they will work together to fill the book with words. At the end of the week, the children will have their very own books about themselves.
On Jan. 18, 2007, Denning died in an automobile accident in Guatemala City. It was during a tribute event in March at the Merrill Auditorium, that Dana and Berman said they were really inspired by Denning and her organization.
After seeing a screening of the Recycled Life, a documentary about the dump, Dana said she was struck by the dignity of the Guatemalan people and the dignity that Denning showed to them.
The students will be staying at a hotel owned by Safe Passage in Antigua, which is 45 minutes outside of the capital city. According to the Safe Passage Web site, the Lazos Fuertes hotel not only houses volunteers, but it also serves as a training ground for local youth between the ages of 13 and 15. The participants learn all about running a hotel and restaurant, skills that will hopefully prevent them from having to make a living in the dump.
When asked how families make a living in the dump, Berman said the people sort through the trash looking for things they can sell, such as plastic bottles.
Dana said she heard from a student who had made the trip that the smell was indescribable. She said the people are working and living among hypodermic needles and medical waste in this dump that spans acres and acres of land.
Within the last several years, she said, the Guatemalan government has taken action to prevent children under the age of 16 from entering the dump. Due to methane gas buildups, fires are a frequent occurrence.
“It’s still not safe, but it’s safer,” she said. The students will not visit the dump, but they will not be able to miss it as they travel through the city.
Dana said the students would spend one day with a social worker, visiting some local homes. She said the presence of a social worker is a good idea as there will be “poverty these students have never seen.”
On the other hand, Dana said there is a “richness to family values that we forget (and) a real richness to their lives there (in terms of) a sense of community that is being lost in our culture.”
The trip is certainly providing a method of bringing people together in Cape Elizabeth as Dana said she knows of a number of adults who would like to make the trip.
“We want to plant the seed for Cape Elizabeth,” she said.


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